The Scotsman

EU blockade of vaccines ‘not sensible’, says Johnson

- By ALEXANDER BROWN

Boris Johnson described supply blockades as not “sensible”, responding to European Commission moves for tougher controls on Covid vaccine exports.

The Prime Minister made the declaratio­n yesterday, less than 24 hours after claiming “greed” and “capitalism” were behind the UK’S vaccine success in a joke about the procuremen­t with Tory colleagues at the 1922 Committee.

A Scots university is to return a Benin bronze sculpture looted by British soldiers in the 19th Century to Nigeria.

Aberdeen University has now agreed to return the cul tural treasure which will now enter the collection of the new Edo Museum of West African Art in Benin City.

Thousands of metal and ivory sculptures and carvings – known as the Benin Bronzes – were looted by British forces in 1897 during the destructio­n of Benin City in presentday Nigeria. Many of the items were sold on by soldiers and administra­tors with the university acquiring the bronze head of an Oba, or king, at auction in the 1950s for £750.

The object, now insured for hundreds of thousands of pounds, is considered one of the finest examples of Benin Late Period Art.

Talks have been ongoing between a number of museums and the Nigerian authoritie­s, including the Royal Court, with Aberdeen University the first institutio­n to agree to return one of the Benin treasures. Neil Curtis, Head of Museums and Special Collection­s, said: “The University of Aberdeen has previously agreed to repatriate sacred items and ancestral remains to Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and has a procedure that considers requests in consultati­on with claimants.

“An ongoing review of the collection­s identified the Head of an Oba as having been acquired in a way that we now consider to have been extremely immoral, so we took a proactive approach to identify the appropriat­e people to discuss what to do.”

Over the last 40 years there have been growing calls for the return of such items.

An expert panel, including academic specialist­s and curators, as well as representa­tives of the University Court, the Hunterian Museum in the University of Glasgow and the Nigerian claimants, discussed the proposal in detail and unanimousl­y recommende­d its return to Nigeria.

Professor George Boyne, Principal and Vice-chancellor of the University of Aberdeen, said: “It would not have been right to have retained an item of such great cultural importance that was acquired in such reprehensi­ble circumstan­ces.

"We therefore decided that an unconditio­nal return is the most appropriat­e action we can take, and are grateful for the close collaborat­ion with our partners in Nigeria.”

Benin City was the centre of a powerful and long-lasting kingdom in West Africa of the Edo people, renowned for its tradition of high-quality metalworki­ng from at least the 17th century.

The expansion of British trade and colonial control in the later 19th century brought it into conflict with the kingdom of Benin, ultimately leading, in 1897, to the city being attacked and destroyed by a British military expedition the “Benin Punitive Expedition” - with many inhabitant­s killed.

The royal palace was burned and looted, and the Oba, Ovonramwen Nogbaisi, exiled.

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 ??  ?? Neil Curtis, Head of Museums and Special Collection­s at the University of Aberdeen, top, with the bronze sculpture, which is considered one of the finest examples of Benin Late Period Art
Neil Curtis, Head of Museums and Special Collection­s at the University of Aberdeen, top, with the bronze sculpture, which is considered one of the finest examples of Benin Late Period Art

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